US11866454B2 - Degradable silane having thio and amino groups, silicic acid polycondensates and hybrid polymers produced therefrom, use thereof and method for producing the silanes - Google Patents
Degradable silane having thio and amino groups, silicic acid polycondensates and hybrid polymers produced therefrom, use thereof and method for producing the silanes Download PDFInfo
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- US11866454B2 US11866454B2 US16/973,523 US201916973523A US11866454B2 US 11866454 B2 US11866454 B2 US 11866454B2 US 201916973523 A US201916973523 A US 201916973523A US 11866454 B2 US11866454 B2 US 11866454B2
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C07—ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
- C07F—ACYCLIC, CARBOCYCLIC OR HETEROCYCLIC COMPOUNDS CONTAINING ELEMENTS OTHER THAN CARBON, HYDROGEN, HALOGEN, OXYGEN, NITROGEN, SULFUR, SELENIUM OR TELLURIUM
- C07F7/00—Compounds containing elements of Groups 4 or 14 of the Periodic Table
- C07F7/02—Silicon compounds
- C07F7/08—Compounds having one or more C—Si linkages
- C07F7/18—Compounds having one or more C—Si linkages as well as one or more C—O—Si linkages
- C07F7/1804—Compounds having Si-O-C linkages
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- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B33—ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY
- B33Y—ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING, i.e. MANUFACTURING OF THREE-DIMENSIONAL [3D] OBJECTS BY ADDITIVE DEPOSITION, ADDITIVE AGGLOMERATION OR ADDITIVE LAYERING, e.g. BY 3D PRINTING, STEREOLITHOGRAPHY OR SELECTIVE LASER SINTERING
- B33Y70/00—Materials specially adapted for additive manufacturing
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C08—ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
- C08G—MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS OBTAINED OTHERWISE THAN BY REACTIONS ONLY INVOLVING UNSATURATED CARBON-TO-CARBON BONDS
- C08G77/00—Macromolecular compounds obtained by reactions forming a linkage containing silicon with or without sulfur, nitrogen, oxygen or carbon in the main chain of the macromolecule
- C08G77/04—Polysiloxanes
- C08G77/22—Polysiloxanes containing silicon bound to organic groups containing atoms other than carbon, hydrogen and oxygen
- C08G77/28—Polysiloxanes containing silicon bound to organic groups containing atoms other than carbon, hydrogen and oxygen sulfur-containing groups
Definitions
- the present invention relates to new silanes as well as the production of biodegradable, organically modifiable silicic acid polycondensates (resin systems) and polymers thereof or therewith.
- the silanes according to the invention contain one or more substituents with short or longer hydrocarbon chains which are bonded to the silicon via oxygen, wherein longer chains are interrupted and/or substituted either by hydrolysable and/or enzymatically or otherwise cleavable groups within these chains and/or in such a way that the remaining hydrocarbon chains are water-soluble when these groups are cleaved.
- substituents further contain thiol and/or amine groups.
- the silanes can be inorganically condensed and/or organically linked via an addition reaction with compounds having C ⁇ C double bonds or rings (radicals “X”).
- the reaction partners with the radicals X also contain short or longer hydrocarbon chains, wherein longer chains are either interrupted by hydrolysable and/or enzymatically or otherwise cleavable groups within these chains and/or substituted in such a way that, in the event of a cleavage of these groups, the remaining hydrocarbon chains are water-soluble.
- the materials obtained in this way are stable against irradiation with y rays so that they can be sterilised.
- the mechanical properties of the hybrid polymers produced from the silanes can be specifically adjusted so that they resemble those of natural, soft or hard tissue. They can be colonized by cell types such as endothelial cells and are therefore suitable, for example, as scaffolds for stabilizing and cultivating cells or tissue.
- the hybrid polymers decompose to a greater or lesser extent within a few weeks, producing toxic, mostly water-soluble, small-scale degradation products.
- tissue engineering Due to the increasing life expectancy of people in Germany and the resulting undersupply of required donor organs, alternatives to organ transplantation from donor to recipient are urgently needed.
- tissue engineering came up in the 1990s. This interdisciplinary field has set itself the goal of improving or replacing the function of damaged tissue in order to ideally cultivate entire replacement organs and tissue from patients' own material.
- tissue engineering In order for cells to form functioning three-dimensional structures outside the body, they require a supporting matrix, which is realised in tissue engineering by artificial scaffolds.
- This matrix can either be colonised in vitro with cells that then grow, proliferate and finally form tissue that is subsequently transplanted, or it can be used directly in the body at the site to be treated to support the regrowth of surrounding tissue.
- biodegradable polymers used so far are not free of disadvantages. Natural polymers are very expensive, have no adjustable degradation rates and only limited adaptable mechanical properties. In addition, they can provoke defence reactions of the body and/or do not offer good cell adhesion, which is necessary for tissue formation. Some representatives, such as PLA and PGA, are hydrolysed to acidic products such as lactic and glycolic acid, which additionally catalyse further polymer degradation (autocatalysis), making it difficult to predict the outcome. These products can also cause inflammatory reactions.
- scaffolds made of biopolymers produced by 2PP are well suited for the adequate imitation of the ECM (extracellular matrix) for tissue engineering. If degradable scaffold materials are used, the decomposition of the scaffold also provides the possibility to create space for cell migration and expansion.
- the object of the present invention is to provide cross-linkable and cross-linked materials which, on the one hand, are accessible to closer cross-linking or are more closely cross-linked than purely organic materials and can therefore achieve mechanical properties which can essentially only be achieved with silicon-containing hybrid materials, but which, on the other hand, can be more completely degraded under physiological conditions than the hybrid materials known to date, whereby in particular the presence of longer, poorly cleavable and thus poorly degradable chain structures such as polymethacrylate chains is to be avoided.
- the materials according to the invention should also be sterilizable and biocompatible if possible, so that they are suitable for the manufacture of implants or scaffolds.
- FIG. 2 shows a porous shaped body printed by the same process, also made of a material which is in accordance with the invention.
- the group R or each of the groups R is independently a hydrolytically condensable group
- the thiol or primary or secondary amino group is a polyaddable group.
- At least one or each of the groups R 1 consists exclusively of organic components.
- the silane of formula (1) contains at least one thiol or primary or secondary amino group at the end of group R 1 remote from the silicon or, in the case of branched chains, at least one at end of group R 1 remote from the silicon.
- the number of elements with characteristics (a) and (b) in a group R 1 is preferably two to ten, more preferably two to six.
- the substituents have oxygen atoms and the elements are interrupted by oxygen atoms.
- each group R is a hydrolytically condensable group and/or alkyl, provided that at least one group R is a hydrolytically condensable group and no more than one group R is an alkyl group.
- An organically modified silica polycondensate comprising a hydrolytic condensation product of a silane according to any one of [1] to [4] or a mixture of a plurality of said silanes.
- the group R 2 has a b-fold binding hydrocarbon backbone with a straight or branched hydrocarbonaceous chain containing one or more elements, wherein
- cleavable groups are selected from ester, anhydride, amide, carbonate, carbamate, ketal, acetal, disulfide, imine, hydrazone and oxime groups,
- X is a group which, in the said reaction, undergoes an addition reaction with the at least one thiol or primary or secondary amino group of the radical R 1 of the silane of formula (1), and
- b is 2, 3, 4 or greater 4.
- the element or at least one of the elements of the hydrocarbonaceous chain of the radical R 2 preferably has a maximum of six, more preferably no more than four and particularly preferably no more than three consecutive carbon atoms.
- the compound (2) preferably does not contain any silicon.
- the number of elements with characteristics (a) and (b) in a group R 2 is preferably two to ten, more preferably two to six.
- the reactants of the reaction i.e. the silane or the polycondensate on the one hand and the compound R 2 (X) b on the other hand, can be used in any quantitative ratio to each other.
- the compound R 2 (X) b can be used in a stoichiometric excess or shortfall to the silane or the polycondensate or in the same amount relative to the groups reacting with each other. If, for example, a complete reaction of the polyaddable groups, e.g. the thiol groups, in the silane or polycondensate is desired, the compound R 2 (X) b can be added in excess. If, however, a complete conversion of the polyaddable groups, e.g.
- the compound R 2 (X) b can be added in excess. In this way, some of the polyaddable groups are not reacted and can then be used for the subsequent binding of molecules, e.g. enzymes, or, due to the polarity of the groups, only increase the solubility in a medium, for example.
- the organically modified, polymerized silicic acid polycondensate contains unreacted polyaddable groups of the silane or polycondensate, e.g. thiol groups.
- all polyaddable groups of the silane or polycondensate e.g. thiol groups, have been reacted in the organically modified, polymerized silicic acid polycondensate.
- hydrolytic condensation can also take place before the conversion.
- the compound R 2 (X) b serves as a crosslinker and is therefore preferably a small molecule.
- the molecular weight is preferably at most 3000 g/mol, more preferably at most 2000 g/mol and most preferably at most 1000 g/mol. In certain embodiments, the compound has a molecular weight of at most 500 g/mol.
- this low-molecular compound R 2 (X) b does not contain silicon.
- the organically modified polymerized silica polycondensate according to the invention may further contain at least one filler, preferably selected from tricalcium phosphate, hydroxyapatite, bioglass and magnesium particles.
- a further aspect of the present invention is a process for the preparation of the organically modified polymerized silicic acid polycondensate described in points [6] to [13], which process comprises reacting the silane of formula (1) according to one of points [1] to [4] and/or an organically modified silicic acid polycondensate according to point [5] with a compound R 2 (X) b (2) described in points [6] to [13].
- An organically modified silica polycondensate or organically modified polymerised silica polycondensate referred to in the present application should thus always include one obtained by reaction with a silane of formula (1′) or a condensation product thereof.
- the present invention differs from the subject matter of WO 2016/037881 A1.
- the C ⁇ C double bonds are contained in the silane or the polycondensate.
- Such C ⁇ C double bonds are contained in acrylates, for example.
- the thiol When reacting with a thiol, the thiol has to be used in excess to avoid unreacted and therefore toxic acrylate. After the reaction, the excess thiol must be washed out. In the present invention, however, the thiol is contained in the silane or the polycondensate. If the acrylate-containing crosslinker is added in a lower amount, it is completely converted. A subsequent removal of unreacted crosslinker is not necessary.
- a voluminous cyclic group containing C ⁇ C double bonds can also be used as a crosslinker in the present invention. Conversely, such a voluminous cyclic group would be problematic as a component of a polycondensate for steric reasons and would also increase the viscosity excessively.
- acrylate-containing crosslinker is added in a lower amount, unreacted thiols remain in the polycondensate.
- acrylate-containing crosslinker can increase the polarity and thus the compatibility with an aqueous medium, or they can represent a suitable functionalization for binding further groups, e.g. bioactive substances such as enzymes, to the finished product, i.e. the polymerized polycondensate.
- radicals R 1 can be identical or different. If 4-a is greater than 1, the radicals R can be the same or different.
- R 1 The bond of R 1 to the silicon atom can be in the form of the grouping C—O—Si or C(O)—O—Si.
- R 1 is addressed in the former case as alkoxy, in the latter case as acyloxy.
- the hydrocarbon chain of R 1 in variant (a) must not have more than 8 consecutive carbon atoms, but preferably less than 8; if there are 8 or less than 8 in total, the presence of a cleavable group is optional. If the number is greater, there must be cleavable groups by which the hydrocarbonaceous chain(s) is/are interrupted such that no more than 8, but preferably even fewer, carbon atoms follow one another. Even if the total number of carbon atoms in the hydrocarbonaceous chain does not exceed 8, it may optionally (and preferably) be divided into smaller elements by means of cleavable groups. The shorter the element(s) made up of hydrocarbon groups, the better the degradability, because the shorter the fragments produced during degradation.
- the hydrocarbon chain of R 1 may also be longer than defined for (a); in this case, however, groups must be present which can be cleaved and which, possibly together with suitable (hydrophilic) substituents on the chain, cause the cleavage product(s) of the hydrocarbon chain to be water-soluble.
- water solubility should be understood to mean that the cleavage products are water-soluble at their ambient temperature. Since they can accumulate in the human body, the water solubility should therefore be at least 37° C., but preferably the cleavage products are already water-soluble at “normal” ambient temperature, i.e. at 25° C.
- a cleavage product is considered “water-soluble” if it is present as an ion at 37° C. and a physiological pH value of 7.4.
- An example is the carboxy group after cleavage of an ester.
- the cleavage product has a pKS value at 37° C. of less than 6.4 or higher than 8.4.
- solubility means that they can be absorbed at the site of their origin, for example in the body, and/or transported away from there and washed out.
- Variant (a) is preferred over variant (b).
- the hydrocarbon chain of R 1 may still be interrupted by oxygen atoms (ether groups), sulfur atoms (thioether groups) or sulfonyl groups (—S(O)2—) within the single element or elements.
- the radical R 1 is straight-chain; its hydrocarbon chain has 4 to 20 carbon atoms.
- This chain is interrupted by one or more ester groups (—C(O)O—, which may point in either of the two possible directions); the individual elements formed in this way may also be interrupted by sulphur and/or oxygen atoms.
- a thiol group is preferably located at the end of the chain remote from the silicon. This thiol group may be the only thiol group or one of several thiol groups on the radical R 1 .
- thiol addition is performed in the presence of an initiator, as known from the state of the art, while amine addition is also possible without initiator.
- the silanes of formula (1) are accessible in different ways. For example, they can be prepared by reacting a silane of the formula R x a SiR 4-a (3), where a and R have the meanings given for formula (1) and R X means R 3 COO—, where R 3 is C 1 -C 6 -alkyl, preferably methyl, with a compound R 1 —OH, where R 1 has the meaning given for formula (1).
- R X means R 3 COO—, where R 3 is C 1 -C 6 -alkyl, preferably methyl, with a compound R 1 —OH, where R 1 has the meaning given for formula (1).
- R 3 COO— is/are displaced by R 1 —O—. It is advantageous if both the radicals R x and the radicals R are acyl radicals, for example acetyl radicals. If two moles of R 1 OH per mole of silane with four acyl radicals are added, a mixture with on average two radicals R 1 per silane
- silanes or mixtures of these silanes according to the invention can be inorganically condensed, e.g. by a hydrolysis reaction.
- hydrolytically condensable silanes and/or alkoxy compounds of heteroatoms such as B, Al, Zr, Zn or Sn are added to the silanes according to the invention during the hydrolysis reaction.
- the condensate must also be addressed as an organically modified silicic acid heteropolycondensate. If such additives are missing, a silicic acid homopolycondensate is formed.
- silicic acid polycondensate should include both hetero and homocondensates.
- silane polymer an organically modified, polymerized silicic acid homo- or heteropolycondensate
- silane polymer an organically modified, polymerized silicic acid homo- or heteropolycondensate
- each element of the hydrocarbon chain of R 2 in variant (a) must not have more than 8 consecutive carbon atoms, preferably even less. If there are 8 or less than 8 in total, the presence of a cleavable group is optional. If the number is greater, there must be cleavable groups by which the elements of the hydrocarbonaceous chain are interrupted in such a way that no more than 8, but preferably even fewer, carbon atoms follow one another. Even if the total number of carbon atoms in the hydrocarbonaceous chain does not exceed 8, this may optionally be subdivided into smaller elements by cleavable groups. In case the hydrocarbon skeleton of R 2 has more than one hydrocarbonaceous chain (e.g.
- compound (2) is a silane or a siloxane, i.e. a silicic acid polycondensate
- this condition applies to each of the chains present.
- the hydrocarbon chain (or all hydrocarbon chains, see previous section) may also be longer than defined for (a); in this case, however, there must be groups which can be cleaved and which cause the cleavage products of the hydrocarbon chains to be water-soluble.
- water solubility should be understood to mean that the cleavage products are soluble in water at their ambient temperature. Since they can accumulate in the human body, the water solubility should therefore be at least 37° C., but preferably the cleavage products are already water-soluble at “normal” ambient temperature, i.e. at 25° C.
- a cleavage product is considered “water-soluble” if it is present as an ion at 37° C.
- the carboxy group after cleavage of an ester More preferably, the cleavage product has a pK 5 value at 37° C. of less than 6.4 or higher than 8.4.
- cleavage products are not necessarily degradable, their solubility means that they can be absorbed at the site of their origin, for example in the body, and/or transported away from there and washed out.
- the hydrocarbon skeleton of R 2 preferably contains mainly or exclusively alkylene units. Their members may, but need not, be substituted with one or more substituents, the substituents preferably being selected from hydroxy, carboxylic acid, phosphate, phosphonic acid, phosphoric acid ester, phosphoric acid tertiary amino and amino acid groups. Such substituents are often desirable for variant (b).
- the hydrocarbon skeleton of R 2 may consist of such alkylene units.
- the hydrocarbon chain of R 2 may still be interrupted within the single element or elements by oxygen atoms (ether groups), sulfur atoms (thioether groups) or sulfonyl groups (—S(O)2—).
- the cleavable groups of R 2 can be hydrolysable, i.e. hydrolytically cleavable groups. These include, for example, the ester and anhydride groups and, as a rule, the ketal, acetal, disulfide, imine, hydrazone and oxime groups. It is also possible to use cleavable groups which are enzymatically cleavable, such as the ester, amide, carbonate and carbamate groups. The groups can also be cleavable both hydrolytically and enzymatically. As far as the mentioned groups can be cleaved in other ways, this is, according to the invention, of course advantageous, because then other cleavage reactions for the degradation are possible. Ester groups are preferred among the cleavable groups.
- the thiols or amino groups of the silanes (1) or the condensates formed by hydrolysis thereof or with them undergo an addition reaction in the manner of a thiol-ene reaction.
- the groups X in a first version of the invention have terminal polyaddable C ⁇ C groups.
- These can be, for example, acrylic or methacrylic groups (e.g. acrylate and/or methacrylate groups), allyl ester, vinyl ester, allyl ether, vinyl ether groups, propenyl ether, maleimide or N-vinyl amide groups.
- these groups include cycloolefinic, preferably bicycloolefinic and particularly preferably unsubstituted or substituted norbornenyl groups, preferably of the following formula:
- R* and R** can independently be H or an (optionally functionalized) organic radical
- R 2 can further be an organic radical containing C ⁇ C groups
- Z is an oxygen bridge or the radical —(CHR 1 )— n
- R 1 is H or an (optionally functionalized) organic radical and n can be 1, 2, 3, greater than 3 to about 20 or even greater.
- groups X these are ring-opening systems. These are e.g. epoxy groups and reactive cyclic ether groups with e.g. 4 ring members (oxetane group). The glycidyl or oxetane group can be unsubstituted or substituted. Furthermore, cyclic carbonate groups as described for example in DE 4423811.8, spiroesters/spiroorthoesters (the latter are disclosed for example in DE 4125201.2) as well as spiroorthocarbonates and bicyclic orthoesters can be used.
- Compounds (2) may be purely organic compounds (preferably monomers or oligomers), as mentioned above. Examples are diols or triols such as glycerol esterified with at least two methacrylate residues and their reaction products with dicyclopentadiene. Alternatively, at least one hydrolyzable silyl group may be integrated into the hydrocarbon backbone of (2).
- This means that (2) can be a silane which has radicals bonded to the silicon essentially or exclusively via oxygen, at least two of which carry the said group X or at least one of which carries two of the said groups X, or corresponding hydrolytic condensates (silicic acid polycondensates) of such silanes can be used which also have radicals bonded to the silicon essentially or exclusively via oxygen.
- polycondensates can then generally carry more than two groups X in total, for example one or two groups X per silicon atom; more or less is of course also possible.
- Silanes and silane condensates of WO 2016/037871, which carry C ⁇ C double bonds and especially (meth-)acrylic groups, are particularly suitable in this context.
- silane (1) which has not yet been hydrolytically condensed is reacted with compound (2) and/or compound (2) is a silane which has not (yet) been hydrolytically condensed
- subsequent hydrolytic condensation preferably takes place after the reaction of (1) with (2).
- the rule is to start from silanes (1) which have already been hydrolytically condensed, i.e. a material which is already inorganically crosslinked, and to react it either with a purely organic compound (2) or a hydrolytic condensate of a silane of the formula (2).
- the ratio between the groups X of compound (2) and the thiol or amino groups of the silanes (1) or the silane condensates formed from them is variable.
- the groups are used in a 1:1 ratio or the thiol or amino groups are used in a lower ratio to the groups X.
- the latter is favourable, for example, if the groups X are capable of homopolymerisation, i.e. if they are (meth)acrylic groups for example.
- a homopolymerization reaction of the groups X with each other takes place at the same time—even if only to a minor extent.
- the groups X of compound (2) can also be added in a lower amount.
- the ratio of the groups X of compound (2) to the sum of the thiol and amino groups of the silanes (1) and any silane condensates formed from them can be 0.1 to below 1.0, preferably 0.2 to 0.9. Alternative ratios are 0.5 to 0.9 or 0.1 to 0.5. This avoids unreacted crosslinker, which is toxic in the case of acrylate, remaining in the reaction mixture and possibly having to be removed. Furthermore, in this case, unreacted polyaddable groups of the silanes (1), namely thiol or amino groups, are present which, due to their polarity, promote the adhesion of cells, for example, or are suitable for the covalent bonding of further molecules. The polyaddable groups of the silanes (1) thus become functional groups in the organically modified, polymerized silicic acid polycondensate.
- Curing by the thiol-ene reaction can take place via two different mechanisms: Radical thiol-ene reaction and thiol-Michael addition.
- the radical mechanism is initiated by a radical initiator (thermal and/or photoinduced and/or redox-induced).
- a radical initiator thermal and/or photoinduced and/or redox-induced
- non-activated C ⁇ C double bonds such as vinyl, allyl, norbornenyl groups
- photobases can be used, since thiol-Michael addition is base-catalyzed. Photobases release a base upon exposure to light and can thus initiate the Thiol-Michael addition. Photobases can therefore also be used in the production of polymerized compounds according to the invention. The production and use of photobases is described in the literature.
- photochemical work can be carried out with visible and/or UV light.
- Combinations of different conversions for example photochemical and thermal or a combination of redox-induced with e.g. photo induced or thermal curing are also possible.
- possible processing processes for structured materials are e.g. the 2—or multi-photon polymerisation (2PP/MPP), the Digital Light Processing (DLP) and the Stereolithography (STL).
- suitable reaction control (avoidance of an excess of compound (2) if it should be purely organic), only products are obtained which are monomer-free and therefore cannot be allergenic.
- the polymerisation reaction can take place from a (usually liquid or pasty) resin mass (in bulk) containing the components.
- a (usually liquid or pasty) resin mass (in bulk) containing the components for structured products such as scaffolds or implants—but not only for these—the polymerization can take place in a bath, for example, in which the resin material is presented as a mass (liquid or pasty) and polymerized in a desired form or pattern (VAT polymerization).
- VAT polymerization a desired form or pattern
- an exposure is preferably carried out with laser light in a known manner, e.g. a 2—or multi-photon polymerisation (“TPA processing”), as described for example in WO 2011/098460 A1.
- TPA processing multi-photon polymerisation
- structuring with other VAT polymerization techniques can of course also be carried out, e.g.
- DLP digital light processing
- the desired shape is built up layer by layer by sequential exposure.
- the component adheres to a building platform which hangs upside down in the resin mass.
- the bath with the resin mass is irradiated from below and the resulting component is lifted layer by layer.
- the non-polymerised material can then be washed away. If a printing technique such as Multi Jet Modelling (MSM), Poly Jet Printing (PJP), Ink Jet is used, only the required material is printed layer by layer on top of each other, so that washing off is not necessary.
- MSM Multi Jet Modelling
- PJP Poly Jet Printing
- Ink Jet Ink Jet
- the reaction of (1) with (2) produces a possibly chain-shaped or ring-shaped, but usually cross-linked product (hybrid polymer), depending on the number of residues R 1 and R 2 .
- this is usually degradable in various ways, but of course especially hydrolytically or enzymatically, due to the fact that both components, (1) and (2), usually have only short hydrocarbon chains, which may be separated from each other by corresponding hydrolytically or enzymatically and possibly otherwise cleavable groups.
- the hydrocarbonaceous chains remaining when the cleavable groups are cleaved can be water-soluble—at least at the temperature of the human body, but preferably at normal ambient temperature, i.e. approx.
- the hybrid polymers When stored in buffers, the hybrid polymers decompose to a greater or lesser extent within a few weeks, producing toxicly harmless, mostly water-soluble, small-scale degradation products. In addition, both the organic network structure and the oxygen bridge between the organic substituent and the silicon atom are cleaved.
- the hybrid polymers according to the invention are suitable for the production of completely biodegradable or resorbable implants or scaffolds with mechanical data adapted to the respective application.
- the silanes and hybrid polymers according to the invention are also suitable for use in bone cements.
- the materials obtained in this way, as well as some of their precursors, are—in contrast to some materials such as (meth-)acrylate materials—stable against irradiation with y rays (preferred method, as it is easy to handle), so that they can be sterilized. Sterilisation of the shaped bodies produced is often essential, particularly in the medical field, e.g. if they are to serve as bone replacements or scaffolds. And not only the through-polymerized products of the invention are sterilizable, but also the silane/silicic acid polycondensates (1) and many crosslinkers (2), so that the starting materials for the crosslinked products can already be sterilized without further ado.
- the mechanical properties of the hybrid polymers produced from the silanes can be specifically adjusted so that they resemble those of natural, soft or hard tissue. They can be colonized by cell types such as endothelial cells and are therefore suitable, for example, as scaffolds for stabilizing and cultivating cells.
- the two exemplary carboxylic acid ester groups present in this group are accessible to hydrolysis and are designated DG here.
- DG The two exemplary carboxylic acid ester groups present in this group are accessible to hydrolysis and are designated DG here.
- the Si—O bond is also cleaved. This provides a material which can be degraded to silicon at the coupling site of the organic group.
- the associated networking component (2) is presented in a general form and as an example of a multi-ene.
- the multi-ene contains two hydrolytically cleavable carboxylic acid ester groups, which in turn are referred to here as DG. Furthermore, two terminal methacrylate groups are present.
- the organic polymerisation leads to the organically cross-linked structure shown below.
- the material properties of the hybrid polymers according to the invention can be influenced in many ways.
- Fillers of various forms which themselves are degradable or degradable, such as tricalcium phosphate, hydroxyapatite, magnesium particles or bioglasses (particles composed of a glass base of e.g. SiO 2 , Na 2 O or K 2 O/CaO/phosphorus compounds such as P 2 O 5 , which gradually dissolve under certain environmental conditions, see Bioactive Glasses, Fundamentals, Technology and Application of the Royal Society of Chemistry) are particularly suitable for this purpose.
- Such fillers and other additives can be used to influence the degradation behavior, mechanical properties such as mechanical stability (e.g.
- Pores can be created either directly, by structuring the shaped body accordingly, or by containing degradable or degradable fillers in the organically cross-linked material, which degrade rapidly after the shaped body, such as a scaffold, is inserted into the body.
- a local acceleration of degradation can also be achieved, for example, by using a filler that provides basic degradation products when it breaks down.
- Bioglasses for example, are suitable fillers for this purpose.
- non-degradable fillers can also be added in order to influence, and in particular to increase, the mechanical stability of a shaped body produced from the material according to the invention. It is, of course, advantageous if such fillers are themselves small particles.
- Photobases and photoacids can be integrated into the material systems as triggers in order to initiate degradation or to increase the degradation rate of a sample at a later time by catalyzing the cleavage of degradable groups by the acids or bases released by exposure of the sample.
- the preparation and appropriate use of photobases and photoacids is described in the literature.
- photobases are advantageous because they can be used not only, as described above, in the synthesis of the compounds of the invention, but also in their degradation.
- proteins to the material according to the invention which have the properties of growth factors (e.g. bone morphogenic proteins) or osteoinductive mediators in order to further improve the suitability of the material as a scaffold in tissue engineering.
- growth factors e.g. bone morphogenic proteins
- osteoinductive mediators e.g. osteoinductive mediators
- Such proteins can be used as an additive or directly bound to components (1) and/or (2) and thus be used as their constituents. In the latter case, of course, the conditions specified for them must be observed (e.g. binding of the proteins via an ester group; linking of the individual amino acid via acid amide groups).
- the use of the materials according to the invention covers, inter alia, use in the form of bulk materials, fibres, composites, cements, adhesives, casting compounds, coating materials, use in (reaction) extruders, in the field of multi-photon polymerisation. They are suitable for a wide variety of purposes. In particular, their use for medical applications (e.g. as implants, bone replacement materials, bone cement) is important. However, the use in other applications outside the body is also possible.
- the product mixtures U1, U2 and U3 were then hydrolysed in several steps at 90° C. To this end, enough water was added so that one water molecule was added to every fifth remaining bound acetoxy group (but at least one water molecule to every twentieth acetate group present before hydrolysis). After the addition of water, the mixture was stirred at 90° C. for 1 minute and then the volatile components were removed in an oil pump vacuum. The degree of hydrolysis of the Si—OAc and Si—OAlk groups was checked by 1 H-NMR spectroscopy. The water addition was repeated until essentially all acetate groups were removed from the mixture. No cleavage of the alkoxy groups was observed. The resulting products H1, H2 and H3 have an average of two alkoxy groups bound to one silicon atom. The respective products are described below as SH resins H1, H2 and H3.
- the specimens were stored in distilled water or in buffer solutions (phosphate buffer and carbonate buffer) at 37° C.
- the degradation medium was renewed every 5-7 days.
- the weight loss of the samples was determined after 16 weeks.
- the degradation rate is strongly dependent on the pH value of the degradation medium and the network structure of the material system used and can be adjusted accordingly and adapted to the requirements.
- V2+H2 The degradation media were examined by 1 H-NMR spectroscopy to identify possible degradation products. The cleavage of the Si—O—C bond between the organic and inorganic network could be detected. Also the hydrolytic cleavage of all other predetermined breaking points (in the listed design examples ester groups) could be confirmed by the detection of glycerol in the degradation media.
- V1+H1 The degradation media were examined by 1 H-NMR spectroscopy to identify possible degradation products. The cleavage of the Si—O—C bond between the organic and inorganic network was detected.
- the described degradable inorganically pre-crosslinked silanes e.g. H1, H2 and/or H3 can be additionally organically crosslinked and thus cured with the described crosslinkers e.g. V1, V2 and/or V3 by the photoreactive groups. This enables the processing of the described material in a 3D printer, which is also based on the DLP principle. Individual structures can be created.
- Lucirin-TPO and 0.052 g pyrogallol were dissolved in 16.12 g V3.
- the material could be processed in a 3D printer (DLP process) of Rapidshape S60-LED and the desired shape could be produced.
- the shaped body produced in this way is shown in FIG. 1 .
- the example was repeated, with 0.5% by weight titanium oxide nanoparticles added as filler.
- the porous shaped body produced in this way (shown in FIG. 2 ) is suitable, for example, as a bone replacement material.
- the material system was processed in the so-called 3D printer to a grid cube with an edge length of 1 cm and interconnected pores.
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Abstract
R1 aSIR4-a (1)
-
- where
- the group R1 or each of the groups R1 independently
- is bound to the silicon via an oxygen atom,
- comprises a straight or branched hydrocarbonaceous chain having one or more elements, wherein
- (a) each of the elements has not more than 8 consecutive carbon atoms, each of plural elements of the hydrocarbonaceous chain being separated from the next element by a cleavable group and/or
- (b) the elements have one or more cleavable groups and any hydrocarbonaceous chains remaining upon cleavage of said group(s) are water soluble,
- wherein said cleavable groups are selected from ester, anhydride, amide, carbonate, carbamate, ketal, acetal, disulfide, imine, hydrazone and oxime groups,
- has at least one thiol or a primary or secondary amino group,
- the group R or each of the groups R is independently a hydrolytically condensable group, and
- a is 1,2,3 or 4.
Description
R1 aSiR4-a (1)
-
- is bound to the silicon via an oxygen atom,
- has a straight or branched hydrocarbonaceous chain containing a plurality of elements, wherein
- (a) each of the elements has not more than 8 consecutive carbon atoms, each of the elements of the hydrocarbonaceous chain being separated from the next element by a cleavable group; and/or
- (b) the elements have one or more cleavable groups and all the hydrocarbonaceous chains remaining upon cleavage of that group or groups are water soluble,
- wherein the cleavable groups are selected from ester, anhydride, amide, carbonate, carbamate, ketal, acetal, disulfide, imine, hydrazone and oxime groups,
- has at least one thiol or a primary or secondary amino group,
R2(X)b (2),
-
- (a) each of the elements has not more than 8 consecutive carbon atoms, each of a plurality of elements in the hydrocarbon chain being separated from the next element by a cleavable group; and/or
- (b) the elements have one or more cleavable groups and all the hydrocarbon chains remaining upon cleavage of that group or groups are water soluble at ambient temperature,
-
- (i) it is composed of alkylene units, the alkylene units being unsubstituted or at least one of the alkylene units being substituted with one or more groups selected from hydroxy, carboxylic acid, phosphate, phosphonic acid, phosphoric acid ester and tertiary amino and amino acid groups
- (ii) it is interrupted by one or more oxygen atoms and/or sulphur atoms and/or sulphonyl groups.
-
- (i) it is composed of alkylene units, at least one of the alkylene units being substituted with one or more groups selected from hydroxy, carboxylic acid, phosphate, phosphonic acid, phosphoric acid ester and tertiary amino and amino acid groups
- (ii) it is interrupted by one or more oxygen atoms and/or sulphur atoms and/or sulphonyl groups
-
- Silane of the formula (1′)
R1 aSIR4-a (1′) - where
- the group R1 or each of the groups R1 independently
- is bound to the silicon via an oxygen atom,
- has a straight or branched hydrocarbonaceous chain containing one or more elements, wherein
- (a) each of the elements has not more than 8 consecutive carbon atoms, each of a plurality of elements in the hydrocarbonaceous chain being separated from the next element by a cleavable group; and/or
- (b) the elements have one or more cleavable groups and all the hydrocarbonaceous chains remaining upon cleavage of that group or groups are water soluble, wherein the cleavable groups are selected from ester, anhydride, amide, carbonate, carbamate, ketal, acetal, disulfide, imine, hydrazone and oxime groups,
- has at least one thiol or a primary or secondary amino group, the group R or each of the groups R is independently a hydrolytically condensable group, and
- a is 1,2,3 or 4.
- Silane of the formula (1′)
R1 aSiR4-a (1)
-
- wherein in the compounds of formula (1)
- the group R1
- is bound to the silicon via an oxygen atom,
- preferably has a purely organic structure, i.e. contains no silicon atoms,
- a straight or branched hydrocarbonaceous chain of variable length (preferably free of cycles) comprising a plurality of elements, wherein
- (a) each of the elements has not more than 8, preferably not more than 6, more preferably not more than 4 and most preferably not more than 2 or 3 consecutive carbon atoms, each of the elements of the hydrocarbonaceous chain being separated from the next element by a cleavable group, and/or
- (b) the elements have one or more cleavable groups and all the hydrocarbonaceous chains remaining upon cleavage of said group(s) are water-soluble,
- wherein said cleavable groups are selected from ester, anhydride, amide, carbonate, carbamate, ketal, acetal, disulfide, imine, hydrazone, and oxime groups, and wherein, if there is more than one of the above cleavable groups, they may be the same or different in any way,
- has at least one thiol or primary or secondary amino group which is preferably located at the end of group R1 remote from the silicon or, in the case of branched structures, at least at one end of group R1 remote from the silicon,
- the group R is a hydrolytically condensable group, preferably selected from groups having the formula R′COO— or R′O— or hydroxy, or a group R1, wherein R1 is alkyl, preferably C1 to C6 alkyl and more preferably methyl or ethyl, with the proviso that at least one group R is a hydrolytically condensable group and no more than one group R is an alkyl group, and
- a is 1, 2, 3 or 4, preferably 2, 3 or 4 and more preferably 2, and is on average about 2 when several such silanes are mixed.
-
- R2 has a b-fold binding hydrocarbon backbone comprising a straight or branched hydrocarbonaceous chain of variable length (preferably annular) with one or more elements, wherein
- (a) each of the elements has not more than 8, preferably not more than 6, more preferably not more than 4 and most preferably not more than 2 or 3 consecutive carbon atoms, wherein each of a plurality of elements of the hydrocarbonaceous chain is separated from the next element by a cleavable group, and/or
- (b) the elements have one or more cleavable groups, and any hydrocarbonaceous chains remaining upon cleavage of said group(s) are water soluble,
- wherein the cleavable group is selected from ester, anhydride, amide, carbonate, carbamate, ketal, acetal, disulphide, imine, hydrazone and oxime groups, wherein, if several of the above cleavable groups are present, they may be selected the same or different in any way,
- X is a group which undergoes an addition reaction with the thiol or primary or secondary amino group of the radical R1 of the silane of formula (1), this group containing a C═C double bond or a ring which is opened in the addition reaction, and
- b is 2, 3, 4 or greater 4.
- R2 has a b-fold binding hydrocarbon backbone comprising a straight or branched hydrocarbonaceous chain of variable length (preferably annular) with one or more elements, wherein
-
- A. Preparation of a compound R1—OH (S3):
-
- B. Preparation of silanes of the formula (1)
- B1. transesterification of a compound R1—OH (here: HS—CH2—CH2—OH, S1) with a silane of the formula (3) (here: Si(OAc)4) to form a silane of the formula (1) (product U1):
-
- B3. Transesterification of a compound R1—OH (here: compound from preparation A, S3) with a silane of the formula (3) (here Si(OAc)4) to give a silane of the formula (1) (product U1):
-
- C. Hydrolysis+condensation—Production of the resins H1, H2 or H3:
-
- H1 (has on average two alkoxy groups and two (OH/O . . . ) groups per Si atom)
-
- H2 (has on average two alkoxy groups and two (OH/O . . . ) groups per Si atom)
-
- H3 (has on average two alkoxy groups and two (OH/O . . . ) groups per Si atom)
-
- D. Preparation of the crosslinkers (compounds (2)) D1.
-
- D3. Other examples of crosslinkers, some of which can be produced in a similar way to V3, are
-
- D4. Examples of crosslinkers with C═C double bonds
-
- E. Curing of resin systems/test specimen preparation and characterization
| E1. Mechanical tests: |
| Tensile-E-Module | Tensile strength | |||
| H2 + V2 | ~35 MPa | ~1.6 MPa | ||
| H1 + V1 | ~1900 MPa | ~17 MPa | ||
| Sample | Degradation medium | Weight loss after 16 weeks | ||
| V2 + H2 | Dest. H2O | 28% | ||
| V2 + H2 | Phosphate buffer | 20% | ||
| V2 + H2 | Carbonate Buffer | 100% | ||
| V1 + H1 | Dest. H2O | 5% | ||
| V1 + H1 | Phosphate buffer | 3% | ||
| V1 + H1 | Carbonate Buffer | 6% | ||
| Sample | Degradation medium | Water absorption after 16 weeks |
| V2 + H2 | Dest. H2O | 50% by weight on dry weight |
| V2 + H2 | Phosphate buffer | 100% by weight on dry weight |
| V2 + H2 | Carbonate Buffer | 54% by weight based on dry weight |
| (after 4 weeks; completely degraded | ||
| after 16 weeks) | ||
| V1 + H1 | Dest. H2O | 10% by weight on dry weight |
| V1 + H1 | Phosphate buffer | 7% by weight based on dry weight |
| V1 + H1 | Carbonate Buffer | 14% by weight based on dry weight |
Claims (5)
R1 aSiR4-a (1)
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|---|---|---|---|
| DE102018114406.7A DE102018114406B4 (en) | 2018-06-15 | 2018-06-15 | Degradable silanes with thio and amino groups, silicic acid polycondensates and hybrid polymers made therefrom, their use and processes for the production of the silanes |
| DE102018114406.7 | 2018-06-15 | ||
| PCT/EP2019/063979 WO2019238426A1 (en) | 2018-06-15 | 2019-05-29 | Degradable silane having thio and amino groups, silicic acid polycondensates and hybrid polymers produced therefrom, use thereof and method for producing the silanes |
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| DE102014217932A1 (en) | 2014-09-08 | 2016-03-10 | Siemens Aktiengesellschaft | Arrangement and method for galvanically separated energy transmission |
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- 2018-06-15 DE DE102018114406.7A patent/DE102018114406B4/en active Active
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| WO2019238426A1 (en) | 2019-12-19 |
| EP3807286A1 (en) | 2021-04-21 |
| DE102018114406A1 (en) | 2019-12-19 |
| DE102018114406B4 (en) | 2021-07-22 |
| US20210261576A1 (en) | 2021-08-26 |
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| EP3807286C0 (en) | 2023-09-06 |
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